Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Southeast Asian leaders snub US meeting after Trump skips Asean

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BANGKOK: Several Southeast Asian leaders snubbed a meeting with US officials on Monday after President Donald Trump decided not to attend a regional summit in Bangkok.

Just three leaders from the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) showed up to the session, along with a host of foreign ministers.

Trump has been accused of turning his back on Asian allies for pulling out of a major trade pact, as fellow superpower China pursues its own deals and investment projects in the region.

US did not send top officials to the weekend Asean summit, instead dispatchin­g commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and national security adviser Robert O’brien.

Monday’s sparsely attended address from O’brien stood in contrast to earlier Asean meetings, which had all been attended by most heads of state. “It’s not appropriat­e for Asean to send leaders when the US representa­tion is not on parity,” one diplomat in Bangkok said.

Another diplomat said: “It’s not a boycott, it’s just that other leaders have other meetings to attend to.”

In lieu of Trump’s physical presence, O’brien read a letter from the president inviting “the leaders of Asean to join me in the United States for a special summit” next year.

In attendance were the prime minister of Thailand, which is hosting the summit, along with the leaders of Laos and Vietnam, which is next year’s ASEAN chair.

JUST THREE LEADERS FROM THE 10-MEMBER ASEAN SHOWED UP TO A MEETING WITH US OFFICIALS.

BEIJING: A 67-year-old grandmothe­r and her husband, 68, named their new baby girl Tianci or “gift from heaven”.

Now, it seems the couple, one of the oldest in the world to have a naturally conceived a child, might have to pay up for the gift bundle: The local government in eastern China’s Shandong province is calculatin­g how much to fine them for having a third child, breaking the limit of two children, as per China’s family planning policy.

The couple already has two children in their 40s. Partly to blame for the looming fine will be the internatio­nal publicity that the new mother, Tian, a retired doctor, and her husband and retired lawyer, Huang Weiping, received after the birth last week.

Besides internatio­nal headlines, Tianci’s birth at the Zaozhuang maternity hospital attracted the scrutiny of officials from the local family planning department.

Shandong Province regulation­s restrict all couples to two children, exception could be made if the children are physically impaired or born through ex-spouses.

Couples who violate these rules face a fine that is calculated according to a city’s average income and the number of children, the tabloid Global Times said in a report.

Huang believed the regulation only applied to women up to 49 years old and therefore his much-older wife would be exempted.

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